Progressive Muslims in a world of ISIS and Islamophobes

Ani Zonneveld, president of
Muslims for Progressive Values, explains the struggle to organize
progressive Muslim communities and institutions in a fight back in the era of ISIS.

Ani Zonneveld

Karima Bennoune:What led to your own fight against
Muslim fundamentalism?

Ani Zonneveld: I am an immigrant from
Malaysia to the United States. What first brought me to activism was my
personal experience of gender inequality within the Muslim community in the
US. I thought I would put out an Islamic pop CD and that would be a positive
contribution to counter stereotypes after 9/11. I was surprised to find that some in my Muslim community thought
that as a female singer my voice is "aurat," an extension of my
body that also needed to be covered.This was an alien concept for me,
given that for centuries Muslim women have contributed to music and
singing. That forced me to
reassess. Going back to the community I
was part of was not an option. So, I started a progressive Muslim community.
Fortunately, there were many Muslims that concurred.

KB: Tell us about the founding of MPV
and the shape of the organization today.

AZ: The founding of MPV came
about through the coalescing of several progressive Muslim communities in
several US cities. Our founding meeting was in 2007. I have been President of
Muslims for Progressive Values since then. It is a 100% volunteer organisation
with chapters in Los Angeles, New York, Washington, Atlanta, Chicago, as well
as in Canada, France, Chile, Malaysia and soon in Uganda. Our Facebook grouphas over 15,000 members from around the
world; our YouTube
channel has had more than 2.5 million views.

KB: How has your work evolved?

AZ: It started with founding progressive
Muslim communities on the ground because there were a lot of Muslims that were
disenfranchised in their mosques. They were alienated by the gender
inequalities and racism. There are a
lot of American Muslims who are critical thinkers. Obviously, it takes an entity to organize them, and so that is
how MPV started - by building grassroots communities. Now, we have evolved into
securing United Nations consultative status, so we are countering human rights
abuses perpetuated by Muslim majority countries in the name of Islam at that
level.

KB: What does the term “progressive”
mean to you?

AZ:
We define it in terms of certain
values: human rights, the ethics of equality, egalitarian and critical
thinking, and critical reading of the scripture. For gender equality, what it means here in the US is different
than for someone in Pakistan or in Sudan. Here in the US, it means we empower
women to be spiritual equals with men. What it means to be progressive is to have an inclusive and
compassionate understanding of Islam - and living it.

KB: Why was it important to you, among
the many issues you work on, to openly tackle LGBT rights?

AZ:
Prejudice in the name of Islam is unacceptable. This
is a matter
of justice. Imam
Daayiee, the first openly gay Imam in the US is on our advisory board. In
“Your Fatwa Does Not Apply Here,”
you note that his acceptance of Muslim same-sex unions has been cited by
advocates in Pakistan. It warms my heart to be able to see a young LGBT person
come out in front of our community, that includes straight as well as LGBT
people. And to be affirmed by the Muslim community we have created.

KB:
What are the biggest challenges in doing this work?

AZ:
The biggest challenge is funding. We
also face some pushback
from within the Muslim community and also from Islamophobes, but also
unfortunately from some non-Muslims on the left.

KB:
In my book I argue that the right and the left in the West have both gotten
this issue wrong at times, and we often find ourselves caught in the middle.

AZ:
Let us take the media, for example. As progressive Muslims, ours is a narrative
that does not fit the dominant story line. We were interviewed by a public
television station, akin to the BBC, for the tenth anniversary of 9/11.
Afterwards, the executive producer said, “your voice is irrelevant.” That is
one example. Another is coverage of LGBT issues. They will interview the LGBT Muslim who has been discriminated
against, and they will interview the homophobic Imam. But, even after interviewing me, they will not include us in the
story. That adds to the Islamophobia. Because then the narrative is “all
Muslims are intolerant so why should
we tolerate them?"

KB:
As a progressive Muslim, what is your message to progressives in the West?

AZ:
Those on the left should stop giving space to radical Muslims. If they are
intolerant, why should they be given airtime?
ISIS is in the picture and there are even some Muslims in the US and
Europe that are going
to Syria to join. However, the
progressive voices that are countering all that are not being promoted. The
question we always hear from non-Muslims is ‘how come Muslims are not speaking
out?’ It is simply
not true.

KB:
What are the social responsibilities of people of Muslim heritage in the ISIS
era?

AZ:
We have to be honest. The recruiting
materials ISIS and Al-Qaeda use are very flashy. On every page there is
religious language, and Islamic content. They are using religion to recruit radical kids to their cause. Why is
it working? That is what Muslim institutions are not addressing. It is working
because it is familiar language. They were taught that Islam is exclusive, and
we are the only ones going to heaven. We have been infiltrated
by Wahhabi teachings. We need to address that.
We need to say to the teachers in Islamic schools, “we are not teaching
this particular theology anymore.” If you grow up and have this sense of
entitlement as a Muslim and then become disenchanted with your society because
you have been discriminated against since your name is Mohammed and you cannot
get a job, this becomes an easy line to cross. You use religion to go kill,
because you are angry and you have a religious justification on top of that.

KB:
Some in the diasporas say there is too much discrimination against Muslims
for us to speak critically about this.
How do you respond?

AZ:
The only way to address the discrimination against Muslims is for us to deal
with the problems first and to be honest. If you are going to be dishonest and
simply say Islam is a religion of peace and everything is hunky dory, that does
not work. Islam is a religion of peace, but what are we teaching? That
is the issue. If we just brush the issue under the rug, it will not go away.

KB:This echoes what Pakistani
feminist Nuzhat
Kidvaisaid when I interviewed her for my book.
During a TV debate with a mullah about violence against women, he lectured her
about Islam-religion-of-peace. Nuzhat
replied, “I don’t need to be told how peaceful Islam is. I want to know about your practice and how
that is peaceful.” That is an important distinction.

AZ: Yes. MPV has established its positions based
on sacred text and traditions. Scholars
do not attack us. Young punks who do
not know Islam are the ones that do. When we say women are allowed to lead
co-ed congregations in prayer, scholars know that the first Imamah was
appointed by the Prophet Muhammad and she did so. But we are not taught that.
When people claim Sharia law states we should punish people for homosexuality,
we push back by asking, “where does it say that in the Quran?” Where is Sharia
law coming from? It is man-made.

KB. What is the potential for people of
Muslim heritage using religious strategies and those using non-religious
strategies to work together?

AZ: We need to work
together if we have the same end goal and that is to do away with
injustice.

KB: That is why I interviewed
both people like the “liberal mullah of Herat” who fights forced marriage with
religious discourse in Afghanistan, and atheists organizing protests against
Taliban terrorism. What stories in the book stayed with you?

AZ: My favorite line is the quote from a mother
who lost her son to Algeria’s Armed Islamic Group in the 1990s. She wanted to
explain how the fundamentalists take advantage of ignorance: “If you want to confuse an ‘ordinary
person’, you talk about God instead of about politics – and you have won.” The stories brought out the realities on the
ground. They made me even more determined to persevere. I cannot imagine the
suffering people have gone through in the name of Islam.

KB: In this moment, are you optimistic for
the struggle against Muslim fundamentalism and for progressive Islam?

AZ: I am very optimistic, despite what is going
on in the world. The amount of people that have been reaching out to us from
across the globe is incredible. They are all seeing this radicalism that has
destroyed their Islam and their community and their culture from the inside.
They are waking up. I think it took something like a Boko Haram and an ISIS to
wake people up.

For our part, MPV is creating a partnership
called the Alliance of Inclusive Muslims with the Quilliam Foundation and
UK - based human rights lawyer Tehmina Kazi. It is
an umbrella group, gathered around shared values. One key value is human rights
for all regardless of religion, sectarian affiliation, gender identity, or
sexual orientation. Another is freedom of and from belief. We believe these
values are in the Qur’an at its core. This alliance is a way to push back
against Wahhabism. There is such a strong desire on the part of many of us to
make clear that “I am not ISIS. I am not like those criminals.”

In the afterword for the paperback
edition ( published 8 December) of her book Your Fatwa Does
Not Apply Here: Untold Stories from the Fight Against Muslim Fundamentalism, Karima Bennoune writes: “What has kept
me going as terror and obscurantism metastasize is the fact that the resistance
escalates too. For example, Muslims for Progressive Values (they perform
same-sex Muslim marriages!) and its unstoppable Malaysian American musician head
Ani Zonneveld,
are convoking a global Alliance of Inclusive Muslims to question the right of the regressive
Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to speak for the faith
internationally. In a June 2014 Geneva press conference, this new ‘collective
of progressive Muslims across all nationality, race and sectarian affiliations’
promised to ‘challenge theological justifications for hate with the progressive
values that we feelto beinherent in Islam.’ How can you not be
inspired?”

About the author

Ani Zonneveld is Founder and President
of Muslims for Progressive Values (MPV).
She is a Grammy Award winning musician, activist,
and writer based in Los Angeles. Her albums include "Ummah Wake-Up",
"One", and "Islamic Hymns: Celebration of Life".Follow her on twitter @AniZonneveld.

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